Via Fornicata:
a street in the Campus Martius, mentioned once by Livy (XXII.36.8: in via fornicata quae ad campum erat, 216 B.C.). The name is derived from certain arches that ran beside the street or spanned it, and it may possibly (HJ 485) be that which was afterwards called
Via Tecta(q.v.).

Via Nova:
a street constructed by Caracalla, which ran parallel to the Via Appia, along the front of the
Thermae Antoninianae(q.v.), which he built (Aur. Vict. Caes. 21: aucta urbs magno accessu viae novae;
Hist. Aug. Carac. 9: viam novam munivit, quae est sub eius thermis). It is shown on Forma Urbis, 3, as about 30 metres wide, while the via Appia is hardly one-third of this width. It is mentioned in a Christian inscription (CILVI.9684). It can obviously have nothing to do with the via Nova mentioned by Frontinus (see
Horti Asiniani).1